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Tanya
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Tanya
@Lind5T
RN, BoyMom, cat Mom, Dog Mom. living and loving life in the woods, in Dixie. exDem 2015. lover of nature and peace. caretaker of a husband with Ca 2022, 🇺🇸
Florida, USA 가입일 Nisan 2022
559 팔로잉222 팔로워

At the cancer Center. My husbands Platelets are back to normal. Round 2 CHEMO & Immunotherapy. Prayers please 🙏🏻
#cancer
#Cancersux
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When you go to post on the bottom, you can set it to verify accounts only you’ll see the blue highlight. Just click that go to verified only and it will take care of that.
Lainey@lainey3416
@0hour1 How do you set your account to stop non-blue check people from posting?
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If it was anything like the store, I was not going to get the shits from IKEA bro I was tapping out
Chad BTC@TheChadGPT1
@0hour1 Did you Atleast get some Swedish meatballs?
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This is my best friend since grade school. She has a message she wants to share. The rest of her story is in the comment section. Please take the time to read. Ty.
My name is Krystal and I am writing on behalf of every mother who has sent their child to school believing they would be safe—only to discover too late that they were not. I write to you not just as a grieving parent, but as a voice for every family shattered by unchecked bullying, silence, and denial in our school systems.
On March 12, 2024, my 13-year-old son Jonah took his own life.
Jonah was loving, intelligent, funny, artistic, and deeply compassionate. Like any teenager, he cared about how he looked, went to school dances, got good grades, and was full of curiosity. What we didn’t know—what no one told us—was that Jonah had also been suffering in silence. After his death, multiple students came forward to share what he had never said out loud: that he was being bullied, relentlessly.
One witness told us they saw Jonah curled in the fetal position, being physically assaulted by a group of kids the day before he died.
We were blindsided. Jonah never mentioned the bullying at home. When we reached out to his school’s principal and vice principal, we hoped for compassion and transparency. Instead, we were met with denial, deflection, and blame. They insisted there was no bullying and speculated—horrifically—that Jonah had taken his life over a rumor he had told someone I had died. When I told the vice principal that I was, in fact, alive and speaking to her, she coldly asked whether I was his biological mother or if his father had “someone new.” This was just days after we lost our son.
We requested access to Jonah’s school computer to understand more about what he was going through. Our request was denied under FERPA. We searched his phone. His personal computer. We found no answers. Just silence.
I was never allowed to see Jonah. No officer spoke to me. No one explained anything. I stood outside our house as my child lay inside, lifeless. I wish I had pushed past them. I wish I had held him one last time.
Jonah’s case was closed within two days.
There was no formal investigation. No follow-up. Despite the statements from witnesses, despite the clear signs that he was targeted, bullied, and failed—no one has been held accountable.
Hey you! I’m shouting out to anyone reading this who holds power and influence—please listen.
No parent should have to bury their child.
No child should be silenced, ignored, or blamed for their own suffering.
No school should be allowed to dismiss a life lost to bullying without consequences.
I am not just asking for sympathy. I am asking for accountability, transparency, and justice. Jonah mattered. And the children still here—hurting, afraid, and unheard—they matter too.
Please help us demand better. Help us prevent this from happening to another child. Help make Jonah’s story impossible to ignore.
I’ve included a piece of Jonah’s writing, his own words. He once wrote an essay defining what it means to be a hero. In it, he said:
What defines a hero?
The definition of hero is someone who does something good for people. But "hero" is a big word, it shouldn't be used for just average "good" things, it would be better used for things that help more people, things that are bigger in comparison than just putting something back to its correct aisle in the store, things like saving lives or making others lives just much better.
Examples from throughout history are Martin Luther King, who helped make the rights of people more equal and thorough and he changed history for the better. Another could be Abraham Lincoln who made slavery illegal and saved many people from it and poverty. There could even be other things that count as "hero-like", like the first people who made houses or developed farming and agriculture; even the creators of languages could be counted as "heros" for changing the lives of many for the better.




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